From ZDNet:
Around half of the websites that use WebAssembly, a new web technology, use it for malicious purposes, according to academic research published last year.
WebAssembly is a low-level bytecode language that was created after a joint collaboration between all major browser vendors.
[...] However, while the vast majority of samples were used for legitimate purposes, two categories of Wasm code stood out as inherently malicious.
The first category was WebAssembly code used for cryptocurrency-mining. These types of Wasm modules were often found on hacked sites, part of so-called cryptojacking (drive-by mining) attacks.
The second category referred to WebAssembly code packed inside obfuscated Wasm modules that intentionally hid their content. These modules, the research team said, were found [as] part of malvertising campaigns.
(Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Friday January 10 2020, @03:48PM
If you really are missing the point by saying that, then perhaps you're best left as part of the example of why things are worse today than they were back then.